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Lender Generate Capital to Buy Bankrupt Bitcoin Miner Compute North's Stake in 2 Bitcoin Mining Facilities

The lender is paying $5 million in cash and assuming liabilities associated with the two sites, which total 400 MW of operating capacity.

Wolf Hollow Power Plant in Texas (Compute North) 

https://mobile.twitter.com/computenorthllc/status/1547296579123662848/photo/1
Wolf Hollow Power Plant in Texas (Compute North) https://mobile.twitter.com/computenorthllc/status/1547296579123662848/photo/1

Lending firm Generate Capital is buying up bitcoin mining hosting firm Compute North's stake in two mega-mining facilities for $5 million, Tuesday bankruptcy filings show.

Compute North, one of the largest bitcoin mining firms in the world, declared bankruptcy in late September, saying it can't fulfill debt obligations worth up to $500 million.

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Generate Capital agreed in February to lend the hosting firm up to $300 million for the development of two sites, a 300 megawatt (MW) facility in Wolf Hollow, Texas, and a 100 MW one in Kearny, Nebraska, said Compute North's chief financial officer, Harold Coulby, in previous testimony. An entity called CN Pledgor LLC owns 100% of the Wolf Hollow and Kearney facilities through its total ownership of CN Borrower LLC , Coulby said.

According to purchase agreement, the lender was the only one to bid for CN Pledgor's equity of CN Borrower, and the court approved the sale.

Coulby claimed that, in July, Generate Capital "asserted several technical events of default" in order to take control of Compute North assets, triggering the miner's chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Fast forward to November, and Generate is fully buying out Compute North's sites for $5 million and is assuming several liabilities associated, including obligations to clients that host their machines at their sites, according to the agreement.

The process of connecting the Wolf Hollow plant to the Texas grid, managed by the Electricity Reliability Council of Texas, has not been completed, the agreement said.

Read more: Troubled Data Center Compute North Struggled With Crypto Winter. Then Its Relationship With a Major Lender Soured

Eliza Gkritsi

Eliza Gkritsi is a CoinDesk contributor focused on the intersection of crypto and AI, having previously covered mining for two years. She previously worked at TechNode in Shanghai and has graduated from the London School of Economics, Fudan University, and the University of York. She owns 25 WLD. She tweets as @egreechee.

Eliza Gkritsi